While Frye's Bushland coaches and teammates rolled to the Comanche Relays team title Saturday afternoon, Frye was busy putting his stamp on the boys division of the 58th running of the Amarillo Relays Meet of Champions.

The come-and-go crowd of 5,000 in Dick Bivins Stadium saw Frye play giant killer to the big boys, winning the 100- and 200-meter dashes, then placing fourth in the 400-meter run by clocking a personal best.

Frye scored 24 team points to help Bushland to a sixth-place team finish.

Frye became the first Bushland High athlete to win gold in a running event at the Amarillo Relays for the 4-year-old Class 2A school.

Friday, Andrew Hudson become the first Falcon to secure Relays gold by winning the discus at 165-2.

"What (Frye) did needs to be congratulated. He really competes out there," said Amarillo High boys coach Jim Langdon, whose squad easily won the team title with 136 points.

What Frye did to double in the 100 and 200 is run two different races.

Frye's quick start out of the blocks in the 100 provided the momentum for his personal-best 10.74 seconds and earn an upset against Palo Duro's Xavier Campbell, who took second in 10.85 seconds.

After taking fourth in the tightly contested 400 - second through fourth times were 50.04, 50.39 and 50.56 - Frye found a burst of speed at the right time to chase down Pampa speedster Shavious Kelley on the back stretch of the 200 to win in 22.22.

As a sophomore two years ago, Frye competed in the Relays and finished second in the 100 and third in the 200. Last year, Frye ran with his teammates in a different meet on the same weekend of the Relays.

"I asked my coach at the beginning of the season if I could run the Relays," Frye said. "I really like this meet."

Frye refused to back off in the two sprints, even trailing by a couple of meters in the 200 before passing Kelley and winning by 2 meters. A smile crossed Frye's face when talking about the 400 because his time of 50.56 was a season-best.

"My starts usually aren't my best (in the 100), but I exploded out of the blocks and came up with my best time," Frye said. "I knew I had to get out of the blocks, and if I could stay with (Campbell) the first 30-40 meters, I had a chance. In the 200, I have run against Shavious and know how good he is. I had to really push it."

Frye said running against athletes from larger-enrollment schools is a motivation like no other.

"They gave me good competition, and that's what I like," Frye said. "That's what made me run faster - the competition."